B.C. on track for record-breaking year for illicit overdose deaths: coroner

Dec 21, 2020 | 11:06 AM

VICTORIA — British Columbia is facing a record-breaking year for overdose deaths and the provincial coroner is urging caution as the illicit drug supply grows more toxic. 

Chief coroner Lisa Lapointe says there were 153 suspected toxic drug deaths in November, an 89 per cent increase from the same month last year. 

In a statement, she says says 1,548 people have died from overdoses so far this year and that number puts every health authority at or near the highest-ever monthly totals. 

It says toxicology findings show a larger number of those who died between April and November had extreme concentrations of fentanyl, compared with previous months. 

The coroners service says an average of five people died every day in the province last month, and over the first 11 months of the year, 81 per cent of those who died were males. 

In September, the provincial health officer allowed more health professionals to prescribe alternative drugs to those who are using toxic street drugs. 

The coroner’s statement says the COVID-19 pandemic has been deadly for those who have substance use disorder because street drugs have become more toxic. 

Lapointe says that providing more people with access to pharmaceutical alternatives will help reduce the harms caused by the illicit drug market.

“In the five years of this public health emergency, more than 6,500 families have experienced the grief and sadness of losing a loved one to the challenging medical condition of drug addiction,” Lapointe says. 

The coroner says illicit drug deaths among those aged 19 to 59 have been trending downward, while deaths for those 60 and over are going up. 

Fentanyl or its analogues are still detected in more than 80 per cent of illicit drug toxicity deaths this year, the service says. 

About 55 per cent of illicit drug toxicity deaths happened in private residences this year. 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 21, 2020.

The Canadian Press